Saturday, January 17, 2015

At Home With the Cullens...

Science Club is building two 3-chambered bat houses to accommodate up to 200 local bats!
These bats are insectivores that eat a huge amount of insects, including mosquitoes and other pests.
Bat populations are declining world-wide, due to habitat destruction, so we are happy to supply these helpful mammals with a home.

Bat Conservation Issues

Bat House Builder's Handbook

How to Install a Bat House


Bat house parts
All the parts



Assembly

Assembled Bat House (unpainted)

More plants!

Cultivated duckweed and pond lettuce were added to the pond.  We now have a healthy selection of floating plants.  Our lilies are dormant and will re-emerge in the Spring.




Guerilla Gardening!

Science Club and AP Environmental Science made seed balls (marble-sized clay balls rolled in native wildflower seeds), and launched them into the swale to create a wild flower meadow!




Friday, January 9, 2015

Healthy Azolla

Our pond Azolla is doing well.  It has doubled in amount over the break and turned a beautiful (and healthy) burgundy color.
Red Azolla, Pond lettuce, and Parrot Fern

Healthy Azolla

Azolla has an interesting history and interesting future.

Research on Azolla
Dual application of duckweed and azolla plants for wastewater treatment and renewable fuels and petrochemicals production

Eocene Arctic Ocean sediments deposited at a time of large Azolla blooms contained glycolipids typical for heterocystous cyanobacteria presently living in symbiosis with the freshwater fern Azolla, indicating that this symbiosis already existed in that time. Our study thus suggests that heterocystous cyanobacteria played a major role in adding “new” fixed nitrogen to surface waters in past stratified oceans.

Traditionally Azolla is maintained and propogated in slow-flowing creeks or overwintered in protected beds, then introduced into paddies between plantings of rice. The fern can then be either incorporated before rice seedlings are transplanted, or left to be shaded out as the rice canopy develops. The low C:N ratio of the fern ensures rapid mineralization after incorporation, with yields in the subsequent rice crop enhanced by up to 1000 kg ha-1.

Water quality!


We are so lucky that Ms. Wendy Wert, Environmental Engineer, has been with us to do Sewer Science this week!  We learned about water quality and how to make, test, and treat sewage!!





Making sewage

Adding toilet paper

Testing pH
Testing turbidity and COD

Testing Ammonia levels




Microorganisms!  Ciliates, Rotifers, Water Bears!